The 1935 Yosemite Souvenir Sheet is an imperforate and ungummed reissue of the 1934 sheet printed for the Trans-Mississippi Philatelic Exposition and Convention held in Omaha, Nebraska. The original sheet was not available at general post offices.

Farley's Follies

The infamous "Farley’s Follies" controversy began in 1933 when Postmaster General James A. Farley removed several stamp sheets from the printing presses before they were gummed or perforated. He autographed these sheets (which were not available to the public) and gave them to colleagues and family, creating precious philatelic rarities. Stamp collectors were outraged when they discovered what had happened. Finally, the Post Office came up with a solution – the reissue in sheet form of all the stamps issued since March 4, 1933, in ungummed condition, all but the first two imperforate and in sufficient numbers to satisfy public demand.

This is a great album to start with because it pictures U.S stamps that are easy to find and buy. Pages illustrated on one side only, high quality paper, every stamp identified with Scott numbers. Includes history of each stamp. Affordable - same design as Mystic's American Heirloom album.

Similar to standard American Heirloom album but includes mounts that are already attached to pages, saving you time and effort. Sturdier pages than American Heirloom. Includes Scott numbers and stamp history. This volume is for stamps issued 1935-1966, over 600 stamps. Higher quality album than Heirloom.

The 1935 Yosemite Souvenir Sheet is an imperforate and ungummed reissue of the 1934 sheet printed for the Trans-Mississippi Philatelic Exposition and Convention held in Omaha, Nebraska. The original sheet was not available at general post offices.

Farley's Follies

The infamous "Farley’s Follies" controversy began in 1933 when Postmaster General James A. Farley removed several stamp sheets from the printing presses before they were gummed or perforated. He autographed these sheets (which were not available to the public) and gave them to colleagues and family, creating precious philatelic rarities. Stamp collectors were outraged when they discovered what had happened. Finally, the Post Office came up with a solution – the reissue in sheet form of all the stamps issued since March 4, 1933, in ungummed condition, all but the first two imperforate and in sufficient numbers to satisfy public demand.